Da Madrid a Paestum: nuove tecnologie per la fruizione e la valorizzazione della collezione archeologica di Paestum del Marchese di Salamanca.
Abstract
The nineteenth-century collection of the Marquis of Salamanca, preserved at the National
Archaeological Museum of Madrid, consists of numerous findings from Poseidonia-Paestum in the
second half of the nineteenth century, including the great crater of Assteas depicting the madness of
Heracles and the Roman sculptures of Livia and Tiberius. A high quantity of vascular items
produced in Paestum, kept mostly in the Museum’s storage, is equally important to the point of
constituting a real corpus of pottery. It was only partially divulged to the scientific community and
almost completely unknown to the general public. The research has allowed to determine the actual
role played by J. de Salamanca in the excavation activities conducted in Poseidonia-Paestum and to
integrate the identification of antiquities of Paestum. The study of the materials preserved in Madrid
was carried out on the basis of recent scientific findings that have allowed to determine a better
chronological scan and a greater stylistic-formal definition of Paestan pottery, class on which the
study was focused, promoting a new form of fruition and enhancement through the Multimedia
Book and some three-dimensional models. [edited by the Author]